How U.S. bank balance sheets have changed as Fed raises rates
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[October 13, 2023] (Reuters)
- The Federal Reserve's aggressive monetary policy tightening is
prompting U.S. banks to slow the flow of credit and beef up cash levels
after the panic in March when Silicon Valley Bank collapsed.
The Fed last raised its policy rate in late July, to a range of
5.25%-5.50%, but the effects of the policy tightening that began in
March of 2022 and expectations that rates will stay high until well into
2024 continue to work their way through the financial system.
For instance, yields on the long-term U.S. government bonds that
influence both how banks price credit and their customers' demand for
loans have shot up by roughly a percentage point since that last Fed
rate hike. Alongside that, overall U.S. commercial bank credit during
the third quarter began shrinking on a year-over-year basis for the
first time in more than a decade, Fed data show.
The annual decline was largely driven by a drop in the value of those
same Treasury bonds whose yields were soaring, because rising yields
means falling prices. That also hurt the values of mortgage-backed
securities held broadly by banks.
That said, slowing loan growth didn't help matters.
The largest U.S. banks over the next week or so will report how they
fared in the July-through-September period, starting with quarterly
earnings reports on Friday from JPMorgan, Citigroup and Wells Fargo.
Overall bank credit, reported weekly, stood at $17.26 trillion on the
last Wednesday of September on a non-seasonally adjusted basis, down
from $17.30 trillion on the last Wednesday of June and $17.33 trillion a
year earlier.
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An eagle tops the U.S. Federal Reserve building's facade in
Washington, July 31, 2013. REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst/File Photo
Residential and commercial real estate loans continued to grow
smartly, though the pace in the quarter eased to under 8% from a
year earlier from an over-10% annual pace in the prior quarter.
Commercial and industrial loans declined a second straight quarter
after peaking on March 15 immediately after SVB's failure, totaling
$2.75 trillion at the end of September, down from $2.78 trillion at
the end of June and the lowest level in 11 months.
Banks have meanwhile been building up their cash assets, and in the
most recent quarter the biggest 25 banks have added rapidly to their
cushions.
Bank deposits overall stabilized during the quarter, after falling
sharply in the wake of the March bank failures.
Small banks and foreign-affiliated institutions gained back more
ground than the biggest 25 banks, whose deposits reached a peak in
April 2022 and are now down more than 8% from then.
Deposits at smaller banks fell sharply after the March bank turmoil,
but have recovered much of their losses, and are now down about 2%
from their April 2022 level.
(Reporting by Ann Saphir; Editing by Dan Burns and Diane Craft)
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